Kosvinsky Kamen
Kosvinsky Kamen | |
---|---|
Косвинский камень | |
Highest point | |
Elevation | 1,519 m (4,984 ft) |
Coordinates | 59°31′N 59°03′E / 59.517°N 59.050°E |
Geography | |
Location | Russia |
Parent range | Ural Mountains |
Mount Kosvinsky Kamen, Kosvinsky Mountain, Kosvinski Mountain,[1] Kosvinsky Rock or Rostesnoy Rock (Russian: Косвинский камень, Косьвинский камень, Ростесной камень) is a mountain in the northern Urals, Sverdlovsk Oblast, Russia.[2][3]
Its summit is bare of vegetation with an uneven rocky surface and small lakes fed by melting snow. The Kosva River flows from the mountain, hence the name.[3]
The Great Soviet Encyclopedia describes Kosvinsky Rock as "mountain massif" of height 1,519 m.[4] Its constitution is pyroxenites and dunites of lower and middle Paleozoic era. The slopes are covered with conifers with some birch up to 900–1,000 m, with alpine tundra above.[5]
Military
[edit]According to Jane's Defence Weekly, a command post bunker was built near the mountain as of 1994.[6] It was designed to resist US earth penetrating weapons and serves a similar role as the American Cheyenne Mountain Complex. The timing of the Kosvinsky completion date is regarded as one explanation for US interest in a new nuclear bunker buster and the declaration of the deployment of the B61 Mod 11 in 1997: Kosvinsky is protected by about 1,000 feet (300 m) of granite.
US analysts believe that the command post of the Perimeter system is in the bunker under Kosvinsky Kamen mountain.[7][8]
See also
[edit]- Mount Yamantau - another Soviet/Russian subterranean facility
References
[edit]- ^ Austin, Greg; Muraviev, Alexey D. (10 May 2000). The Armed Forces of Russia in Asia. I.B. Tauris. p. 187. ISBN 978-1860644856.
- ^ Brockhaus and Efron describe its location within the Russian Empire as Verkhoturye uyezd, Perm Governorate, in the okrug of the Bogoslovsky copper plant (Богословский медноплавильный завод)
- ^ a b Косвинский камень, Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary (in Russian)
- ^ Brockhaus and Efron say that its elevation is 2,375 ft., mountain foot circumference is about 40 km.
- ^ "Косвинский камень," Great Soviet Encyclopedia (in Russian)
- ^ Jane's Defence Weekly 25 June 1994, 32, via Austin and Muraviev, The Armed Forces of Russia in Asia, 2001.
- ^ Ron Rosenbaum, Slate magazine "The Return of the Doomsday Machine?", 31 August 2007.
- ^ "1231-й центр боевого управления (в/ч 20003)". Archived from the original on 23 December 2019. Retrieved 1 January 2020.